Title: Integrating Wind Power into the Electric Power System
1Integrating Wind Power into the Electric Power
System
Ed DeMeo Renewable Energy Consulting Services,
Inc. Technical Advisor, Utility Wind Integration
Group
Michael Milligan National Renewable Energy
Laboratory Consultant, National Wind Technology
Center
Michigan Public Service Commission Wind
Forum April 25, 2007
Lansing, Michigan
2Overview
- Integration Issues and Wind Economics
- Electric Utility Planning and Operations Wind
Impacts Overview - Wind Integration Perspective from Around the
Nation - Environmental Issues Impact on Wind Economics
and Integration
DeMeo Milligan Milligan DeMeo DeMeo
3Key Integration Issues
- Costs (capital, energy, OM)
- Variability Impacts (ancillary services costs)
- Energy (fuel displacement) and Capacity (serving
demand growth) Contributions - Environmental Considerations
4Wind Energy Cost Trend
1979 40 cents/kWh
2000 4 - 6 cents/kWh (no subsidy)
- Increased Turbine Size
- RD Advances
- Manufacturing Improvements
- Operating Experience
NSP 107 MW Lake Benton wind farm 4 cents/kWh
(unsubsidized)
2004 3 - 5 cents/kWh (no subsidy) Today
Somewhat higher increased commodity costs
unstable market conditions
5Natural Gas Situation
- Todays tight natural gas markets have been a
long time in coming, and distant futures prices
suggest that we are not apt to return to earlier
periods of relative abundance and low prices
anytime soon. - Alan Greenspan, Federal Reserve Chairman,
Testimony at Senate hearing, July 10, 2003
Wellhead gas costs - 2002-2003 3 -
5/MMBTU Current prices and projections exceed
6/MMBTU
6Cost Comparison
- Wind total capital cost about 1,600 kW today
- Wind energy cost about 5.5/kWh (6.5 without
PTC) - Includes 0.5 to 1.0/kWh for OM
- Wind energy costs are stable over plant lifetime
Natural-gas plant fuel cost (HR 7,000 - 10,000)
/MMBTU 2 4 6 8 10
gas cost /kWh 1.4 - 2 2.8 - 4
4.2 - 6 5.6 - 8 7.0 - 10 fuel only
- Wind-gas synergy save gas when wind blows burn
gas to maintain system reliability during low
winds
7Wind Variability Impacts
- To what extent is wind energy value reduced by
increased operating costs for the rest of the
power system? - How is the power systems ability to reliably
meet load demands affected by wind-plant output
uncertainties?
8Time Frames of Wind Impact Match System Operation
Tasks/cycles
- Power systems can already handle tremendous
variability - Capacity value (planning) based on reliability
metric (ELCCeffective load carrying capability) - Scheduling and commitment of generating units --
hours to several days -- wind forecasting
capability? - Load-following -- tens of minutes to a few hours
-- demand follows predictable patterns, wind less
so - Regulation -- seconds to a few minutes -- similar
to variations in customer demand
9Where Does Wind Data Come From?
Minnesota Xcel
- Meso-scale meteorological modeling that can
re-create the weather at any space and time - Model is run for the period of study and must
match load time period - Wind plant output simulation and fit to actual
production of existing plants
Colorado Xcel
10How is Regulation Impact Calculated?
- Based on actual high-frequency (fast) system load
data and wind data - If wind data not available, use NREL
high-resolution wind production data
characteristics - Impact of the wind variability is then compared
to the load variability - Regulation cost impact of wind is based on
physical impact and appropriate cost of
regulation (market or internally provided)
- Realistic calculation of wind plant output
(linear scaling from single anemometer is
incorrect)
11How is Load Following Impact Calculated?
- Based on actual system load data
- and wind data from same time period
- Meteorological simulation to capture realistic
wind profile, typically 10-minute periods and
multiple simulated/actual measurement towers - Realistic calculation of wind plant output
(linear scaling from single anemometer is
incorrect) - Wind variability added to existing system
variability
Implies no one-one backup for wind
12How is Unit Commitment Impact Calculated?
- Requires a realistic system simulation for at
least one year (more is better) - Compare system costs with and without wind
- Use load and wind forecasts in the simulation
- Separate the impacts of variability from the
impacts of uncertainty
13How is Capacity Value Calculated?
- Uses similar data set as unit commitment modeling
- Generation capacities, forced outage data
- Hourly time-synchronized wind profile(s)
- Several years of data preferred
- Reliability model used to assess ELCC
- Wind capacity value is the increased load that
wind can support at the same annual reliability
as the no-wind case
14High-Penetration Cases
- Minnesota PUC 15-25 wind penetration (based on
energy) (TRC) - California Intermittency Analysis Project
(Follow-on to earlier RPS Integration Study team
participation) - Pacific Northwest NW Wind Integration Action
Plan (and Forum) - Idaho Power about 30 (peak) (no TRC)
- Avista 30 peak (no TRC) some informal review
at Utility Wind Integration Group (UWIG) - BPA analytical work in progress integration
cost is consistent with others - Potential follow-on work to the NW Wind
Integration Action Plan (NWIAP) on regional basis - Northwest Wind Integration Action Plan
http//www.nwcouncil.org/energy/Wind/Default.asp
15Renewable Energy Studies in CA
- RPS Integration Cost Analysis NREL, ORNL,
Dynamic Design Engineering, California Wind
Energy Collaborative for the CA Energy Commission - Used actual renewable generation, load, and
conventional data from ISO Power Information
database - GE/Exeter/Davis Intermittency Analysis Project
for the Energy Commission - Analysis of future scenarios of renewable energy
- Both analyses looked at wind, solar, geothermal,
and biomass
16CA RPS Integration Cost Project
- Examining impacts of existing installed
renewables (wind 4 on a capacity basis) - Calculated regulation, load following impacts of
all renewables - Capacity value (effective load carrying
capability, ELCC) for all renewables - Regulation cost for wind 0.46/MWh
- Load following minimal impact
- Wind capacity credit 23-25 of benchmark gas unit
http//www.energy.ca.gov/reports/reports_500.html
17Regulation and Capacity Value RPS Integration
Study
18California Intermittent Analysis Project
- Up to 24 wind (rated capacity to peak)
- Savings
- WECC nearly 2B
- CA 760M
- Wind forecast benefit 4.37/MWh
- Regulation cost up to 0.67/MWh
- Unit commitment w/forecast results in sufficient
load following capability (and no load following
cost)
- http//www.energy.ca.gov/pier/notices/
19Load Following Impacts in CA
- RPS Integration Cost Analysis found little
discernable impact - Deep dispatch stack provided by market
- IAP found similar result
- Deep CA dispatch stack, augmented by the Western
electricity market
20Factors that Influence Integration Costs Results
and Insights
- Wind penetration
- Balancing area (control area) size
- Conventional generation mix (implication for
higher penetration and new balance-of-system
capabilities - Load aggregation benefits
- Wind resource geographic diversity
- Market-based or self-provided ancillary services
- Size/depth of interconnected electricity markets
- Unit commitment and scheduling costs tend to
dominate - Realistic studies are data intensive and require
sophisticated modeling of wind resource and power
system operations
21Emerging Study/Methods Best-Practices
- Start by quantifying physical impacts
- Divide the impacts by time scale corresponding to
grid operation cycles - Analyze cost impact of wind in context of entire
system in each time scale based on physical
requirements - Load variability
- Wind variability
- System operator must balance TOTAL of all loads
and resources, not individuals - Capture wind deployment scenario geographic
diversity through synchronized weather simulation - Re-create real wind forecasts
22Stakeholder ReviewEmerging Best Practices
- Technical review committee (TRC)
- Bring in at beginning of study
- Discuss assumptions, processes, methods, data
- Periodic TRC meetings with advance material for
review - Examples in Minnesota, Colorado, California, New
Mexico, and interest by other states
23Minnesota 25 Wind Energy Penetration Study (MN
DOC 2006)
- For 3500 to 5700 MW of wind generation delivered
to MN load (15 to 25 of retail electric energy
sales in 2020) - An increase of 12 to 20 MW of regulating capacity
- No increase in contingency reserves
- An increase of 5 to 12 MW in 5 minute variability
- Incremental operating reserve costs of 0.11 per
MWh of wind generation in the 20 case
24Minnesota 25 Wind Energy Penetration Study (MN
DOC 2006)
- Bottom Line The addition of wind generation to
supply 15, 20 and 25 of Minnesota retail
electric energy sales can be reliably
accommodated by the electric power system - The total integration operating cost for up to
25 wind energy is less than 4.50/MWh of wind
generation. Key drivers are - A geographically diverse wind scenario
- The large energy market of the Midwest
Independent System Operator (MISO) - Functional consolidation of balancing authorities
- Sufficient transmission (i.e. minimal
congestion)
25System Operating Costs Impacts Results from
Recent Studies (/MWh)
Penetra- tion () 3.5 20 7 29 15 15 20 34
Regula- tion 0 0 0.19 1.02 0.20 0.23 0.11 0.23
Load- Follow 0.41 1.6 0.28 0.15 0 0 0 0
Unit- Commit 1.44 3.0 1.40 1.75 4.77 4.37 2.00 4.1
8
Total Impact 1.85 4.6 1.87 2.92 4.97 4.60 2.11 4.
41
Study UWIG/Xcel Pacificorp BPA/Hirst We
Energies Xcel/PSCO Xcel/MNDOC MN/MNDOC MN/MNDOC
26Range of System Operating Cost Impacts Studies
Conducted To Date
6 4 2 0
1/2 /kWh
Integration Cost (/MWh)
0 5 10 15 20 25 30
Wind Penetration ( of System Peak Load)
All results to date fall within the crosshatched
area
27GE Energy/NYISO/NYSERDA New York Wind Evaluation
- Comprehensive study of winds impacts on
transmission system planning, reliability and
operations - 3,300 MW of wind in system serving 34,000 MW of
customer load (10 wind penetration) - Energy prices based on functioning commercial
wholesale markets -- day-ahead and hour-ahead - All previous studies based on operating costs
only - Assumes wind is a price-taker
- Market (demand-supply balance) sets price wind
generators are paid the market price
28GE Energy/NYISO/NYSERDA New York Wind Evaluation
- Overall Conclusion NY State power system can
reliably accommodate at least 10 wind (3,300 MW) - Minor adjustments to planning, operation and
reliability practices - Total NY system (less wind) variable operating
costs (fuel, plant startup costs, etc.) reduced
by 350 M - State-of-the-art wind forecasting contributed
125 M of this reduction (about 80 of
perfect-forecast value) - Electricity costs reduced statewide (0.18/kWh --
all kWh) - System transient stability improved
29Winds Contributions to Electric Power
- Energy displacement of fossil fuels
- In most cases, this is the primary motivation.
Previously existing power plants run less, but
continue to be available to ensure system
reliability. - Contrary to common lore, addition of a wind plant
requires NO new conventional backup generation to
maintain system reliability. - In many cases, natural gas is saved, reducing
total system operating costs. In all cases,
overall emissions are reduced.
30Winds Contributions to Electric Power
- Capacity meeting new load growth
- Wind generally less effective in this respect
than conventional generation. Winds may be low
during peak electricity demand periods. - But addition of a wind plant will allow some new
load to be served. The amount depends on many
factors. Examples - New York about 10
- Long Island about 40
- Minnesota about 10
- With experience and over time, operating
strategies and generation mix will evolve so that
combinations like wind, hydro and natural gas
will serve new load reliably.
31- IEEE Power Engineering Society Magazine,
November/December 2005 - Utility Wind Integration Group (UWIG) Operating
Impacts and Integration Studies User Group - www.uwig.org
32- UWIG Summary Key Points from IEEE Power
Engineering Society Magazine, Nov/Dec 2005 - www.uwig.org
33Environmental Tradeoffs
We need to evaluate environmental impacts on a
relative basis. No energy-generation approach
is without impacts. The choice is wind vs.
something -- not wind vs. nothing.
34We cant lose sight of the larger benefits of
wind, says Audubon Washingtons Tim Cullinan.
The direct environmental impacts of wind get a
lot of attention, because there are dead bodies
on the ground. But nobody ever finds the bodies
of the birds killed by global warming, or by oil
drilling on the North Slope of Alaska. Theyre
out there, but we dont see them.
Audubon Magazine, September 2006 feature article
on wind power
35Environmental Benefits of Wind
- No emissions of any kind during operation
- No SOx, NOx, particulates or mercury
- No contributions to regional haze
- No greenhouse gases
- No toxic wastes or health impacts
- Nuclear waste transport and storage unresolved
- Respiratory diseases of growing concern
- No water consumption or use during operation
- Water availability a looming crisis in the
Western US
36Environmental Benefits of Wind
- Global climate change concerns can no longer be
ignored by any legitimate political entity - Most environmental scientists view this as by far
the most serious environmental issue facing
society - Unavoidable evidence mounting
- Very few doubters remain
- Not many arrows in the quiver to address this
concern - We need them all
- Wind energy is one of them
37Paul Anderson, CEO of Duke Energy(Southeastern
Utility, Coal/Nuclear)
- Lobbying for tax on carbon dioxide emissions
- Personally, I feel the time has come to act - to
take steps as a nation to reduce the carbon
intensity of our economy. And its going to take
all of us to do it. - Paul Anderson, quoted in AP press release,
published April 7, 2005
38Wind Contributions in Europe and the United
States (2006)
Generation Total (MW)
Wind of Electricity
Wind (MW)
- Germany
- Spain
- Ireland
- Denmark
- USA
85,000 50,000 5,500 4,200 900,000
22,000 11,600 600 3,100 11,300
7 8 6 30 0.6
Approximate values
39Contrasting Approaches to Accommodating Wind
Power in Europe and in the U.S.
- Europe Wind power is environmentally preferred.
How can we best accommodate it within the
existing power system? - U.S. OK, well accept wind into the existing
system, but it will follow our traditional rules
and procedures.
A change in mindset is needed in the U.S. It
will not come from within the power sector, whose
responsibility is reliability, not change.
Change, and the incentives to enable it, must
originate in the policy sector.
40The Climate Change Threat Is A Major Business
Opportunity
- Technologies to reduce CO2 emissions are needed
worldwide - Industries producing them will provide employment
and profits - Countries that produce them will enjoy export
potential and trade-balance benefits - Countries that do not may miss out on one of the
21st Centurys best business opportunities
41Bottom Line on Wind Power
Wind power is a very low carbon, affordable,
domestic energy source It can make a large
contribution to the US economy -- 20 of
electricity and more As a responsible society, we
need to use it -- and use our ingenuity to
resolve the tactical issues it presents